HKND Group is Building the Nicaragua Grand Canal

This site was originally created to announce and build support for the canal that would be built by HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co. Ltd. The project is wildly ambitious. It will be the largest infrastructure project the region has ever seen with the ceventual onstruction of a $50 billion canal slated to run 170 miles from Nicaragua ’s east to west coast. If successful, it will be profitable not only for the HKND Group, but also for the Nicaraguan government and its people. However, there is great skepticism on the ground. Just the fact that this site's domain expired and was available makes you wonder. However, on a lark I decided to by the domain with the goal of rebuilding as much of the information as was possible from it's archived pages. Who knows, in twenty, thirty, even forty years, folks may look back and find this site knowing the project was a hard won success or an embarrassing failure. Who knows if the original players will still be around.

The agreement between the Nicaragua government and HKND (Hong Kong Nicaragua Canal Development) Group states that the HKND group will not only control of the canal, but also the ability to operate cellphone and internet services in Nicaragua. One wonders how the control of the internet and cell phone services by a Chinese company will impact Nicaraguan businesses.

I'm fascinated with new technology, if it is related to the web or the transmission of information. I code customized application development for my company’s clients that require specialized, industry-specific needs that are usually outside the scope of commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) programs. For instance, if a company uses COTS software, they’re at the whim of the company that builds the software. Imagine the disruptions that could occur if the COTS software were discontinued? The company, most likely would need expensive upgrades with little or no warning, or go out of business. Custom business and web application development that we create for clients is actually owned by them. They can keep it as long as they like. Custom software development alleviates the worry that the one program a company relies on day-in and day-out will suddenly not be available anymore. However, even custom applications need to be updated as technology advances. Imagine if businesses expect to have new internet services built by HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co., Limited and then eveything falls through? As it is, most people have a cynical attitude about anything getting done and are not making changes based on the assumption that the project will ahppen.

Nicaraguan Government grants Canal Concession to HKND

When the Nicaraguan government grants a concession this year to a Chinese company, HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co. Ltd., to build a shipping canal between the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, a half-century wait will be over. The new canal will be wider and deeper than the Panama Canal. For businesses that use the Panama Canal at this time, they will have an alternative starting approximately around 2020, which is the proposed operational date. However, the proposal to build this canal is not without local protests and international skepticism.

Criticisms and Skepticism Locally & Internationally

The main thrust of the criticisms has been that the Master Concession Agreement signed between HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co. Ltd (HKND) and Nicaragua is that Nicaragua has sold its sovereignty for 100 years to a private, foreign-owned company. In June 2012, the Nicaragua’s National Assembly approved a bill to grant a 50-year concession to the newly Hong Kong Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co (HKND) to build the canal across the Latin American country. The concession would be renewable for another 50 years, thus the 100 years of lost sovereignty.

In addition, locals say that the agreement was negotiated without transparency or national consensus. The Chinese company shoulders no liabilities, whereas the reserves of the Nicaraguan National Bank serve as collateral on the part of Nicaragua. The harshest complaints center around the judicial, labor, and financial rights, which they feel have been ceded to HKND.

A Bit of History

However, in July 2012 the Nicaraguan parliament passed Law 800. This law is about the Nicaragua Interoceanic Canal legislation and the establishment of the Interoceanic Canal Committee. It provides a solid legal foundation for the construction of the Interoceanic Canal. A memorandum of understanding between the Authority of the Grand Inter-Ocean Canal of Nicaragua, known as the “Authority,” and the HKND Group, established the project’s scope. A month later in October 2012, both parties signed the Deed of Cooperation, explaining in more granular terms the project details. The HKND group’s responsibilities included planning, designing, constructing, and upon completion, operating and managing the Nicaragua Grand Canal and any other related infrastructure projects. Other related projects would also include ports, an international airport, a free trade zone, and other infrastructure development projects as the need arose.

With control of the canal and the ability to operate cellphone and internet services in Nicaragua, it is understandable why critics say that even the sovereignty of the country, has been ceded to Wang Jing, the chairman and chief executive officer of HKND and chairman and largest shareholder of Xinwei Telecom, a Chinese telecom company which won a deal in 2012 to operate cellphone and internet services in Nicaragua.

The following year, in June 2013, the Nicaraguan parliament gave its approval for the government to sign the Master Concession Agreement with the HKND Group. The HKND Group now had the sole rights to plan, design, construct, and thereafter to operate and manage the Nicaragua Grand Canal and other related projects.

Nicaragua’s government claims that the project will lift the Western hemisphere's second poorest country out of poverty, which may be true, but what is the cost to the environment and how are the people whose lands and homes are on the projected route going to be compensated.

HKND

HKND (Hong Kong Nicaragua Canal Development) Group is a private infrastructure development firm that is based in Hong Kong. It is registered in the Cayman Islands.

Founder of information: HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co., Limited established in Hong Kong on 20 August 2012.

Wang Jing: The Man behind the Canal's Development

The Chinese billionaire Wang Jing owns or controls a number of businesses including by HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment. He is the chairman and CEO of HKND, which in turn is owned by HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment. The development of the Nicaragua canal, estimated to cost between 40 to 50 billion dollars, is the first project for HKND.

Wang believes that by 2030 not only will the addressable shipping trade have grown by 240%, but also that the actual ships will be significantly larger. Although the Panama Canal is undergoing a five billion dollar expansion, Wang feels that that is has become imperative to develop and construct a wider and deeper interoceanic canal to support the larger weight loads, thus generating greater efficiency for shippers. He went on to say in an interview in SinoShio magazine “the Nicaragua Canal and Development Project represents a tremendous opportunity to transform global trade and ignite a new era of growth and opportunity for Nicaragua, its people, and the entire region.”

To answer the critics, a PR release from the HKND Group says the following principles will guide our actions as we undertake this important project:

Integrity — openness, transparency and honesty

Respect for local people with sensitivity to social and environmental impact by serving the best interests of the region and protecting the natural ecosystems and wildlife of Nicaragua;

Economic benefit and value creation across all stakeholder groups including generating local training and job growth while promoting local and regional economic development.

HKND Group is working with a global team of experts with deep experience and capabilities. They want to ensure international participation and involvement in every aspect of the project, from financing, and construction, to logistics. They state there will be competitive tendering processes for qualified Nicaraguan, regional and international firms, consistent with international best practices for fairness and openness for each phase of work. As of 2014 there were a number of other partners already on board.